Markus Meier photo
By
I.B. Rad
Black and White TV
America’s composition’s
an unfinished canvas,
a diverse
ever evolving
mingling of colors,
but with pundits framing it
in a 60s setting
we only see
mid century TV’s
achromatic view
of our republic’s somewhat voguish
if appalling
film noir,
“America in Black and White.”
Where are you?
When I wake,
I don’t hear your greeting,
I don’t see your smile,
I don’t feel your touch…
Then, when I tiptoe past your bedroom,
wander through the living room,
gaze at the garden…,
though I know you’ve gone,
I sigh,
Where are you?
Where are you…
Only after recurrent mournings
have I truly begun to feel
you’re gone;
yet, even so, occasionally
I still cry,
Where are you?
Where are you…
If Only
If only
he’d done this or that
would she have lived
a little happier,
endured
a little longer?
But sadly,
to his lasting sorrow,
as he hadn’t
done this or that,
her life was
what it was;
and, all the while
as he wept,
concurrently,
ten thousand mourners
lamenting others
repented,
‘If only…’
For The late Mrs. Mari Lyn Rad:
Says ‘Eddie’ (Edward Hopper) to his wife,
fellow artist, and model, ‘Jo’ (Josephine Nivison)
How can it be
every year
you grow lovelier?
Objectively, flesh sags, knees creak,
hair thins, wrinkles deepen;
yet, to my eyes,
you’ve grown still more beautiful.
Am I really seeing you
or someone else?
Is it true
beauty’s in the eye
of the beholder?
I.B. Rad
I.B. Rad lives and plays in New York City. This somewhat controversial poet is widely published with much of his work available on the internet. His most recent book, “Dancing at the Abyss” was published by Scars Publications.”
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